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Green-Rainbow Party - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Green-Rainbow Party

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of the Politics series on Green politics


Politics Portal ·  v  d  e 

The Green-Rainbow Party is a political party in Massachusetts. It is the Massachusetts state affiliate of the Green Party of the United States.

Contents

[edit] History

Green-Rainbow Party logo
Green-Rainbow Party logo

[edit] Establishment of official party status

Founded in 1996 as the Massachusetts Green Party, the party attained official political party status in 2000 when the Greens ran Ralph Nader and Winona LaDuke for president of the United States. Official political party status in Massachusetts affects how political groups can use finances, and official political parties are guaranteed ballot access. The Nader ticket received 6% of the vote in Massachusetts, where state law requires 3% during state and national elections for establishing and maintaining official party status. In 2002, the party entered the state gubernatorial race for the first time with Jill Stein as the candidate for governor, Anthony Lorenzen for lieutenant governor, and James O'Keefe for treasurer. Stein and Lorenzen received over 3% and O'Keefe received almost 8% resulting in maintaining state party status in Massachusetts for 2002. An alternate method to establish and maintain state party status in Massachusetts is to have over 1% of voters registered in their party, a threshold that Green-Rainbow has not met yet but is working towards.

[edit] Merger with Rainbow Coalition

In 2002, the party was renamed when it merged with the Rainbow Coalition Party (as founded by Melvin King).

[edit] Loss of official party status

In 2004, with David Cobb as its presidential candidate, the Green-Rainbow ticket was unable to meet the required 3% threshold, and subsequently lost recognition in Massachusetts of state party status. Losing state party status has the results that the expenditures on Massachusetts candidates are subject to the state laws regulating political action committees (or PACs). In addition, the party name is no longer printed on voter registration forms as an option to check off, and the party must collect signatures to place presidential candidates on the ballot; state and local candidates always need signatures to be placed on the ballot.

[edit] Campaign 2006

In March 2006, at a nominating convention, the party nominated five candidates for statewide office: Grace Ross for governor, Wendy Van Horne for lieutenant governor, Jill Stein for secretary of the commonwealth, James O'Keefe for treasurer, and Nathanael Fortune for auditor.[1] In early April, Nathaniel Fortune withdrew his candidacy. The races for secretary of the commonwealth and treasurer were two-way races between the Democrats and Green-Rainbows, with Green-Rainbows polling higher than ever before on a statewide level. In an April 3, 2006 poll by Suffolk University and WHDH, O'Keefe polled at 21% and Stein at 8%. The Ross / Van Horne team, likely to face three other opponents in the election, polled at 2%, before having officially announced.[2]

When Van Horne withdrew from the race in early September, she was replaced by Martina Robinson, a 30-year-old disability and equal marriage rights activist.[3]


Ross and Robinson only garnered 2% of the vote in the gubernatorial election. However Stein won 18% in the race for Secretary of State and James O'Keefe won 16% in the race for State Treasurer.[4] As a result the Green-rainbow Party once again has ballot access.

[edit] Elected officials

Currently, the most prominent public office-holder registered in the Green-Rainbow party is Boston city councilor, Chuck Turner, representing district seven. There are several school board, town meeting, and other municipal office holders scattered throughout the state.

As of June 2007 there were 18 elected Green officeholders in Massachusetts. [1]

[edit] Political ideology

Like most North American Green parties, the basis of the Green-Rainbow Party's platform stems from the 10 key values. The 10 key values are: grassroots democracy, ecological wisdom, social justice and equal opportunity, nonviolence, decentralization, community-based economics, feminism, respect for diversity, personal and global responsibility, and future focus and sustainability. In the American left-right political spectrum, the party would be considered leftist, favoring social libertarianism, strong civil liberties, conservationism and environmentalism, progressive taxation, human rights, and governmental regulation of trade and business.

[edit] Causes and initiatives

The party has been involved in co-organizing an annual March to Abolish Poverty[5] since 2004. Like many minor parties that view the Democratic and Republican parties as creating difficult ballot access laws, the party has also pushed for electoral reforms, particularly instant run-off voting (IRV). The party also champions universal health care and strongly supports the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court's decision to allow same-sex marriages within Massachusetts.

[edit] Organizational structure

The Green-Rainbow Party favors decentralized political power, and its proposed internal structure reflects this, encouraging members to start chapters or "locals" in their city or region. On the state level, there are several decision-making bodies.

[edit] State convention

State conventions are held at least annually, and represent the most powerful decision-making body. Any member of the party, as defined by the by-laws, is a voting member of this body and along with a co-sponsor, may submit proposals for adoption at the convention. Proposals have many uses, including but not limited to platform changes, public statements, or by-law amendments. Proposals are decided upon using the consensus decision-making process.

[edit] State committee

The state committee meets between state conventions at least four times per year. Members of the state committee are based on proportional representation from each of the counties of Massachusetts, but also include reserved diversity seats to ensure under-represented group inclusion. Members are elected as representatives of their residing county. The state committee functions similarly to the state convention, reviewing proposals using the consensus decision-making process.

[edit] Administrative committee

The administrative committee handles day-to-day decisions the party must make, and is composed of the following officers: male co-chair, female co-chair, treasurer, secretary, communications director, membership director, fundraising director, and five diversity seats. Officers are elected by the state convention and vacancies are filled at the state committee. Officers serve one-year terms. There are no term limits.

[edit] Working committees

Working committees are the infrastructure of the party, developing literature, increasing membership, and raising funds (for example.) State committee members are required to serve on at least one working committee. The working committees are: Membership, Diversity, and Volunteer Recruitment Committee; Finance and Fundraising Committee; Technology Committee; Communications and Media Committee, Candidate Development and Legal Committee; Platform Committee; and Procedures, Structures, and Meetings Committee. Any member can serve on on working committee.

[edit] National delegates

The Green-Rainbow Party also sends four delegates to serve on the Green Party National Committee, and other representatives to national working committees.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Green-Rainbow Party April 7, 2006 Post-Convention Press Release
  2. ^ Suffolk University Poll (April 3, 2006)
  3. ^ "Nurse quits lieutenant governor race", The Boston Globe, 2 September 2006 (retrieved 31 October 2006).
  4. ^ "2006 Massachusetts General Election Results", "The Boston Globe", 8 November 2006 (retrieved 8 November 2006).
  5. ^ March to Abolish Poverty

[edit] External links


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